2005 MTV Video Music Awards Japan

The MTV Video Music Awards Japan 2005 were hosted by Takashi Fujii and Megumi at Tokyo Bay NK Hall, the awards included performances by Namie Amuro, Rain, Mariah Carey, Hoobastank, Jamiroquai and Ashanti.

2005 MTV Video Music Awards Japan
DateMay 29, 2005
LocationTokyo Bay NK Hall, Japan
Hosted byTakashi Fujii and Megumi
Websitemtvjapan.com/mvaj
Television/radio coverage
NetworkMTV Japan

Awards

Winners are in bold text.[1]

Video of the Year

Orange Range — "Hana"

Album of the Year

Orange RangeMusiQ

Best Male Video

Ken Hirai — "Hitomi wo Tojite"

Best Female Video

Mika Nakashima — "Sakurairo Mau Koro"

Best Group Video

Linkin Park — "Breaking The Habit"

Best New Artist

Sambomaster — "Utsukushiki Ningen no Hibi"

Best Rock Video

Hoobastank — "The Reason"

Best Pop Video

Ketsumeishi — "Kimi ni Bump"

Best R&B Video

Namie Amuro — "Girl Talk"

Best Hip Hop Video

Beastie Boys — "Ch-Check It Out"

  • The Black Eyed Peas — "Let's Get It Started"
  • Kreva featuring Mummy-D — "Funky Glamorous"
  • Nitro Microphone Underground — "Still Shinin"
  • Kanye West — "Jesus Walks"

Best Video from a Film

Ken Hirai — "Hitomi wo Tojite" (from Socrates in Love)

Best Collaboration

Jay-Z/Linkin Park — "Numb/Encore"

Best Buzz Asia

Japan

Orange Range — "Rocoroshon"

  • Exile — "Real World"
  • Gospellers — "Mimoza"
  • Tokyo Incidents — "Gunjō Biyori"
  • Yuki — "Joy"

South Korea

Rain — "It's Raining"

  • Tony An — "Love Is More Beautiful When You Can't Have IT"
  • g.o.d — "An Ordinary Day"
  • Jang Nara — "Winter Diary"
  • Tim — "Thank You"

Taiwan

Stefanie Sun — "Running"

Special awards

Best Director

Yasuo Inoue

Best Special Effects

Gagle — "Rap Wonder DX"

Best Style

Ashanti

Most Entertaining Video

Gorie with Jasmine Ann Allen and Yamasaki Joann Shikou — "Micky"

International Video Icon Award

Mariah Carey

Most Impressive Performing Asian Artist

Namie Amuro

Live performances

gollark: Historically technological advances have at least eventually replaced lost jobs (not that I think jobs created/lost is a good way to judge innovations) but I suppose you could argue that AI is different somehow. It definitely would be if AI stuff started being able to make more AI stuff, but you would probably run into bigger issues than high unemployment then.
gollark: It also seems unlikely that we would suddenly jump from the current situation where a bit of stuff is automated and quite a lot isn't to everyone being immediately unemployed, so you can notice and do stuff about it in the interval. Restructure the economy for post-material-scarcity or whatever. No idea how that would *work* but oh well.
gollark: If you can make robots/AI/whatever do any work you want easily, I'm sure you could make a few to produce food and whatever without problems.
gollark: Also, congratulations on successfully (so far) navigating the horrors of the UK university system.
gollark: Our culture has such a bizarre obsession with hard work.

References

  1. "Connection Problems". Retrieved 19 October 2016.
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